it compliance

Read this checklist report, with results based on the Eckerson Group’s survey and the Business Application Research Center (BARC), on how companies using the cloud for data warehousing and BI has increased by nearly 50%. BI teams must address multiple issues including data delivery, security, portability and more before moving to the cloud for its infinite scalability and elasticity.
Read this report to understand all 7 seven considerations – what, how and why they impact the decision to move to the cloud.

The largest national multiline insurance had built a repository of Insurance policies (P&C and Life Insurance) on Microfilm and Microfiche in early 90’s, as a preservation strategy. They were grappling with issues as this technology became outdated over time:
• Risk of losing their only source of data for Insurance policies and corresponding communication, need to improve data availability and speed of claims evaluation
• Compliance issues, need of a WORM (write once read many) storage compliant with FINRA regulations, where data should be encrypted when at rest
• Total cost for digitization compared to 10-12 years of support left to maintain insurance policies was not very encouraging
• Required a low cost, cloud-based, FINRA-compliant document management solution which could provide quick access to stored data
Download complete case study to know how LTI’s e-Office sDownload full case study to know how LTI’s e-Office solution enabled 50% TCO for Largest national Multiline Insurance.

As a small-to-midsize fabricated metals manufacturer serving large customers within complex global supply chains, how do you maintain preferred vendor status? The whole world is your competition so you need to step up to meet increasingly demanding customer expectations.
Your customers will expect mass personalization with shorter lead times whether the order is large or small—without sacrificing compliance with their industry’s quality requirements. To meet these demands—despite a skills shortage and volatile material costs and availability—you’ve got to put digital transformation at the top of your agenda.

Going with a single-vendor collaboration platform is an easy call, right?
Employees can communicate and share more easily, and your IT team only has to deal with implementation from one vendor, not dozens.
But, in case you’re still pondering, here are five reasons a collaboration suite makes sense:
Saved time and increased productivity
Lower costs and less complexity
End-to-end security compliance
Scaling at your pace
Control over the back end
Download the Better Together eBook for complete details.

Going with a single-vendor collaboration platform is an easy call, right?
Employees can communicate and share more easily, and your IT team only has to deal with implementation from one vendor, not dozens.
Still pondering? Here are five reasons it makes sense:
Saved time and increased productivity
Lower costs and less complexity
End-to-end security compliance
Scaling at your pace
Control over the back end
Download the eBook for complete details.

Going with a single-vendor collaboration platform is an easy call, right? Employees can communicate clearly, information is shared easily, and processes are streamlined.
When improving collaboration in your enterprise, here are five core areas to focus on:
Saving time and increasing productivity
Lowering costs and complexity
Ensuring end-to-end security compliance
Scaling at your own pace
Having administrative control
In this free eBook, learn how a single-vendor platform helps you achieve these goals.

“Bring your own device,” or BYOD, enables your employees be productive and collaborate wherever they are, but it also introduces concerns around security and compliance. Austin Herrington, Windstream Director of Enterprise/CPE Product Marketing, explains how Unified Communications (UC) can help you address these challenges and focus on your core business.
See how Windstream experts team up with your business to design a customized UC solution that’s right for you.

“Bring your own device,” or BYOD, enables your employees be productive and collaborate wherever they are, but it also introduces concerns around security and compliance. Austin Herrington, Windstream Director of Enterprise/CPE Product Marketing, explains how Unified Communications (UC) can help you address these challenges and focus on your core business.
See how Windstream experts team up with your business to design a customized UC solution that’s right for you.

The end of SHA-1 SSL certificates is here – ahead of schedule. An upgrade to SHA-2 SSL certificates is necessary to maintain proper security, but do you know how to deploy this upgrade? Entrust’s SHA-2 migration guide will help you plan and execute a successful SHA-2 migration to avoid extra costs, eliminate service disruptions and ensure compliance.

“Bring your own device,” or BYOD, enables your employees be productive and collaborate wherever they are, but it also introduces concerns around security and compliance. Austin Herrington, Windstream Director of Enterprise/CPE Product Marketing, explains how Unified Communications (UC) can help you address these challenges and focus on your core business.
See how Windstream experts team up with your business to design a customized UC solution that’s right for you.

“Bring your own device,” or BYOD, enables your employees be productive and collaborate wherever they are, but it also introduces concerns around security and compliance. Austin Herrington, Windstream Director of Enterprise/CPE Product Marketing, explains how Unified Communications (UC) can help you address these challenges and focus on your core business.
See how Windstream experts team up with your business to design a customized UC solution that’s right for you.

In the not so distant past, the way we worked looked very different. Most work was done in an office, on desktops that were always connected to the corporate network. The applications and infrastructure that we used sat behind a firewall. Branch offices would backhaul traffic to headquarters, so they would get the same security protection. The focus from a security perspective was to secure the network perimeter. Today, that picture has changed a great deal.

In this era of digital disruption, businesses must be more agile to capture opportunities. Many viewed cloud computing technology as the way to do this, promising to address agility, scalability, and cost. But in moving to the cloud, many found that its security, compliance, and performance did not fully meet their needs. Additionally, previous common thought was public cloud is less expensive than private cloud. We now know that is not true in all cases. Savvy businesses realise hybrid IT, which includes both offpremises and on-premises services, enables better agility. After initial experience with public cloud offerings, businesses learned that many workloads are best hosted onpremises, primarily due to security, compliance, performance, control, and cost issues.

Security is a looming issue for businesses. The threat landscape is increasing, and attacks are becoming more sophisticated. Emerging technologies like IoT, mobility, and hybrid IT environments now open new business opportunity, but they also introduce new risk. Protecting servers at the software level is no longer enough. Businesses need to reach down into the physical system level to stay ahead of threats. With today’s increasing regulatory landscape, compliance is more critical for both increasing security and reducing the cost of compliance failures. With these pieces being so critical, it is important to bring new levels of hardware protection and drive security all the way down to the supply chain level. Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has a strategy to deliver this through its unique server firmware protection, detection, and recovery capabilities, as well as its HPE Security Assurance.

Security is a looming issue for organizations. The threat landscape is increasing, and attacks are becoming more sophisticated. Emerging technologies like IoT, mobility, and hybrid IT environments now open new organization opportunity, but they also introduce new risk. Protecting servers at the software level is no longer enough. Organizations need to reach down into the physical system level to stay ahead of threats. With today’s increasing regulatory landscape, compliance is more critical for both increasing security and reducing the cost of compliance failures. With these pieces being so critical, it is important to bring new levels of hardware protection and drive security all the way down to the supply chain level. Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has a strategy to deliver this through its unique server firmware protection, detection, and recovery capabilities, as well as its HPE Security Assurance.

Your business has tiers of applications and data. The protection needs of those application and data across a spectrum—starting with basic low cost daily backup, and ranging up to zero data loss with zero downtime. Along the spectrum, compliance requirements must also be met.

“Bring your own device,” or BYOD, enables your employees be productive and collaborate wherever they are, but it also introduces concerns around security and compliance. Austin Herrington, Windstream Director of Enterprise/CPE Product Marketing, explains how Unified Communications (UC) can help you address these challenges and focus on your core business.
See how Windstream experts team up with your business to design a customized UC solution that’s right for you.

“Bring your own device,” or BYOD, enables your employees be productive and collaborate wherever they are, but it also introduces concerns around security and compliance. Austin Herrington, Windstream Director of Enterprise/CPE Product Marketing, explains how Unified Communications (UC) can help you address these challenges and focus on your core business.
See how Windstream experts team up with your business to design a customized UC solution that’s right for you.

Seattle Cancer Care Alliance (SCCA) serves as the clinical arm for research and treatment studies for Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, University of Washington Medicine, and Seattle Children’s. The organization’s outsourced IT service desk operated adequately, but a desire for financial savings, enriched customer relationships, and improved HIPAA compliance drove SCCA to seek out another solution.